Jonathan Cain, keyboardist for the group, lives in Brentwood and his 15-year-old twins attend the school.

“It’s a good place and they’ve been really great to my kids,” Cain says. “It’s one of the reasons we moved here, really. We liked the school and we liked the community and the feeling down here.”

But Cain says that’s where his promotion of the school stops. He says fans that come out to Journey’s TPAC show will get with standard 90-minute hit parade free of further requests for money.

“It will be an intimate evening for sure,” he says. “We’ll be doing everyone’s favorites, similar to what we did at Bridgestone. There’ll be no propaganda. We’re not going to get up there and squeeze people for money. It’s an evening of rock ‘n roll and a celebration of our music. It’s kind of cool that way.”

The Cain family moved to Middle Tennessee about three-and-a-half years ago, and Cain says this is just one of the ways they are integrating themselves into the community. He’s also building a full-fledged commercial recording facility in Berry Hill, Addiction Sound Studios, that’s set to have a grand opening in March.

“I thought it was time to make a footprint here,” Cain says. “I suppose that down the road we’ll do a Journey album here. It’s been a good move for me and my family.”

Journey will play TPAC’s Jackson Hall 9 p.m. Friday, Feb. 24. Tickets are $87.50-$152.50 and are available at www.tpac.org or by calling 782-4040.